ALLYSON FELIX, JENEBA TARMOH, DEAD HEAT AT OLYMPIC TRIALS: COIN TOSS MAY DECIDE WINNER

Bobby Kersee is struggling to make heads or tails of USA Track and Field’s new procedures designed to help break the third-place tie between Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh in the women’s 100 meters at the Olympic trials.

Heads or tails just might be what decides it.

The scenarios involve either a coin toss or a runoff to determine the third and final spot on the team for the London Games.

If both athletes choose the same option, it will determine the tiebreaker. If the athletes disagree, the tiebreaker will be a runoff. If both athletes decline a preference, the tiebreaker will be a coin toss.

Confusing? Kersee certainly thinks so.

The coach told The Associated Press the sprinters won’t make any kind of decision until after they complete the 200 later this week. The final is Saturday.

Kersee wants them to fully focus on the task at hand and not worry about a possible runoff — or a coin flip.

“Nine times out of 10, most athletes aren’t going to want to flip a coin,” Kersee said. “Would you go to the Super Bowl and after two overtimes or what have you, have the referees take both coaches to the middle of the field and say, ‘We’re going to flip to see who wins the Super Bowl?’ I don’t see that.”

The national track governing body said they want the matter decided by next Sunday when the trials end. Kersee said he will wait until 11:59 p.m. if he has to, just to ensure more rest for the sprinters.

He’s fearful of a quick turnaround between the 200 final — should both make it — and another round of the 100. That could be a lot to ask of his athletes.

“I’m asking them to focus on the 200 meters, go through drug testing and hopefully they’ll both make the team in the 200 meters,” Kersee said. “Then we’ll meet as a group, we’ll meet with USA Track and Field. I will be in the room on the meeting, but I will have no decision-making power. I’m going to be listening, but let the athletes decide. Let the managers decide what they want to do — I want the best for the athletes.”

Kersee said earlier in the day he’s in favor a runoff to break the tie. Only, he wanted the race held later, maybe even a few weeks later, on a track somewhere to be determined.

To decide anything right now, the coach said, isn’t fair to Felix and Tarmoh, especially because they are both running the 200 that begins Thursday.

Felix and Tarmoh finished in a dead heat in the 100 on Sunday, each leaning across the finish line in 11.068 seconds. They’re looking to join Carmelita Jeter and Tianna Madison on the team.

With no protocol in place at the time of the tie, the organization had to meet to come up with a plan, which was approved by the United States Olympic Committee.

And one of the options was a coin flip, with the rules as to how the coin will be tossed explicitly spelled out. For instance, it says, “the USATF representative shall bend his or her index finger at a 90-degree angle to his or her thumb, allowing the coin to rest on his or her thumb.”

Being the coach of both, Kersee knows he has a conflict of interest in this situation. But he insisted he’s only concerned with one thing: Doing right by his runners.

“You don’t have to bother us about this now,” he said. “You can wait until later.”

Originally, Tarmoh was declared the third-place finisher and the official scoring said she had edged training partner Felix by 0.0001 seconds. But the results were reviewed, and after a lengthy delay, the dead heat was announced.

In swimming, ties are settled with swim-offs between the two deadlocked opponents. Track has tiebreaking procedures for many of its events, as well, but this is a special case for which there is no written solution — a tie for the last spot on the Olympic team.

The USATF said in a release that two cameras are used to determine photo-finishes, one on the outside of the track and another on the inside.

In Saturday’s race, the image from the outside camera was inconclusive for determining the finish because both runners’ arms obscured their torsos.

The torso position is used to determine the finish.

The image from the inside camera, shot at 3,000 frames per second, was analyzed by timers and referees, who declared the tie.

Should the sprinters settle the matter with a runoff, Kersee said he won’t be at the track for the race.

Sure, he will warm up Felix and Tarmoh. And yes, he will give them some last-minute advice.

But then he will head for the exit.

“I’ll go on a long walk,” Kersee said. “When I come back, I’ll get the news on who did what.”

From ESPN

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START YOUR OWN COMPANY WITH $100! YES, $100

Are you stuck in a profesional rut? If you’ve been thinking about something to change things up on the work end or maybe to just make some extra money, I have found just the right article for you. It is an interview with Chris Guillebeau author, “The $100 Startup: Reinvent the Way You Make a Living, Do What You Love, and  Create a New Future”

Read more:

Start your own company for a hundred bucks? I thought you needed an  army of VC guys, advisors and attorneys for that.

That’s one vision of start-ups, and there are plenty of companies that do  that. The problem is that’s not what most of us are going to do. Everybody’s  seeking freedom, and a lot of people are dissatisfied with their jobs. I wanted  to tell the story of people who have found freedom by doing something that they  love without spending a lot of money.

What does a hundred bucks buy you?

A lot of businesses in the book are actually zero-dollar start-ups. The vast  majoritya were less than $1,000, and probably half of them were a $100 or less.  Lots of online business, it’s the cost of a domain name. It’s the cost of  stationery for some people. It’s the cost of a business license.

During Microsoft’s recent Smoked by Windows Phone challenge, Microsoft-based devices were almost always faster at completing everyday tasks compared to Android and iPhone handsets. But even the fastest Windows Phone can’t run away from the fact that nobody’s buying Microsoft-powered handsets.

Slideshow: 10 Best Windows Phone Apps for Staying Productive Slideshow: The Newest Windows Phone 7.5 Smartphones

Despite critical acclaim, cheap phones, and a novel take on the Pepsi Challenge, few people in the U.S. want a Windows Phones and its market share may be slipping faster than its predecessor, Windows Mobile.

Smoked, by the Numbers

Microsoft recently wrapped up the Smoked by Windows Phone promotion claiming Windows Phone devices beat out more than 50,000 challengers in 36 countries. During the challenge, your smartphone would participate in a head-to-head race against a Windows Phone to complete a basic task such as uploading a photo to Facebook, searching for movie times, or checking weather forecasts. If you won, you’d typically get $100, although Microsoft did offer a new laptop and $1,000 at one point. Microsoft only had to pay out 2 percent of the time, claiming a win rate of 98 percent. The software maker will now use its crushing victories to cover the Internet with video ads showing how awesome a Windows Phone can be.

The Fix is in

Smoked by Windows Phone was also accused of being an unfair challenge and Microsoft even tried to wrangle one crushing defeat against a Samsung Galaxy Nexus into a win, citing a technicality. Tech writer Sahas Katta took his Samsung Galaxy Nexus into a Santa Clara, Calif., Microsoft Store and was challenged to look up the weather in two different cities. Katta had two weather widgets on his Android home screen and had set up his phone to bypass the lock screen so all he had to do was turn on the phone and he’d win. That’s exactly what happened, but Microsoft employees quickly tried to wrangle out of giving Katta the prize with several excuses such as he had to show the weather in two different states. After the rest of the tech media picked up the story, Microsoft apologized and offered Katta the prize.

Soon after Katta’s experience, The Verge tried the challenge and claimed Microsoft stacked the deck in its favor by picking tasks that favored Windows Phone features such as social networking and search baked in to the OS.

No Escape

Despite Microsoft’s best efforts, its new smartphone platform is not popular with consumers. In fact, Windows Phone appears to be less popular in the U.S. than Microsoft’s aging Windows Mobile platform,

From NY Post

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FITNESS TRAINER DELIBERATELY GAINS AND LOSES NEARLY 100 POUNDS (45.5Kg)

A fitness trainer went from fit to fat and then back to fit — deliberately gaining and losing nearly 100 lbs.

On Monday’s show, Paul “PJ” James tells Anderson and his Monday Co-Host Carrie Ann Inaba that he wanted to understand his overweight clients better, but never expected the emotional and physical toll his experiment involved.

“I totally underestimated the psychological and the emotional impact that it would have on me, and I will be honest, in the beginning I thought 90 lbs. would be easy to take off,” says the trainer.

Over a four-week span, PJ gained 88 lbs. and then spent approximately four months taking it off. Take a look at what he told Anderson about the process…

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